Office Depot is blowing out the (AMD Turion-based) HP tx1100 Tablet PC for $999 after a $200 mail-in rebate.
Not a typo, $999!!!
This is the same Windows Vista capable Tablet PC that I reviewed here.
Sweet!
HP
Office Depot is blowing out the (AMD Turion-based) HP tx1100 Tablet PC for $999 after a $200 mail-in rebate.
Not a typo, $999!!!
This is the same Windows Vista capable Tablet PC that I reviewed here.
Sweet!
Just announced at HP's Mobility Summit in Shanghai, China were a total of five (5) new notebooks over the HP Pavilion and Compaq Presario brands.
The units are:
The HP dv6000 and dv9000 notebooks are also the company's first to sport an optional HD DVD drive.
As you can tell, we cannot wait to lay out mitts on these babies.
I have been reviewing the new HP tx1000 Tablet PC.
I reviewed the HP tx1000 in three phases: as an entertainment Tablet PC, as a mobile information worker’s replacement laptop, and as a Tablet PC replacement for the Acer C100 Tablet PCs that are currently placed at client healthcare providers’ offices that are at the end of their operational life.
In the box was the tx1000, a remote control, an additional battery, and two sets of stereo earbud-style headphones.
The sleek, black tx1000 is a very welcome departure in design from the normally utilitarian looks of Tablet PCs and notebooks, apart from the Ferrari series of notebooks from Acer.
This unit has quite a few little design elements that speak to the desirability of the unit. The touchpad, for instance, is of an entirely new design, and the most comfortable I have ever used. It also comes with an integrated fingerprint reader, a 1.3 megapixel webcam, dual microphones built into the lid, and dual headphone jacks, for the included headphones. The stylus has a lanyard for securing it to the system. Going further along with the entertainment theme, the tx1000’s stereo speakers are located on the lid, allowing the user the full benefit of the speakers even when the unit is in slate mode. A dual-layer LightScribe 8X DVD drive completes the package. An added vig is the remote control.
The system also has a plethora of I/O ports, from three (3) USB ports, Ethernet, modem, external monitor, S-Video, ExpressCard, and a 5-in-1 memory card reader.
The tx1000 has both 802.11a/b/g Wi-Fi and Bluetooth built in. In fact, it has a very nifty switch built into the system that allows you to enable/disable wireless connectivity on the fly!
This system came with a 60-day trial of Microsoft Office 2003 Student & Teacher (why?) and Microsoft Works (again, why?). A 6-day Norton Internet Security 2006 package was also in the box (why, why, why???).
I promptly discarded the Norton, AOL, Works, and Office 2003 software, RealRhapsody.
I then installed the Logikworx Standard Desktop Suite 2007.
The tx1000 is based on the speedy dual-core AMD Turion TL-60 CPU running at 2.0 GHz and an NVIDIA GeForce Go 6150 with 128MB.
This system has a Performance Index of 3.0 and more than that, feels pretty fast, for a compact Tablet PC.
As an entertainment PC, the tx1000, out-of-the box (OOB), has a range of multimedia software included, such as Muvee AutoProducer DVD edition, and Sonic Digital Media Plus.
The system just rocked. The IR remote control allowed me to make the most of it and the speakers were quite loud, even in a crowded airport. Using the headphone was another plus, as I was able to get two test subjects (John-III & Trevor) to quietly watch Callou, Bob the Builder, and other content quietly…..
In this test, I tested the suitability of the tx1000 to the task of being the primary workstation of a mobile information worker, such as insurance agents, real estate agents/brokers, or a drug manufacturer’s representative.
I completely wiped the system and performed a clean install of Windows Vista Business and the Logikworx Standard Business Desktop 2007*……
I made the tx1000 into a dual-boot system by installing both Windows XP and Windows Vista™, since some of the target PM software required Windows XP. In the Vista™ partition, I tested the tx1000 using the two most common PM and electronic medical records (EMR) software suites among our clients in both a direct install, and running in a Windows XP Virtual machine…… (Please see notes below for information on Windows XP on the tx1000)
HP has a winner here.
In the tx1000, HP has a Tablet PC with an impressive feature list and at a price point that is easily palatable to most users, small businesses, and enterprises. It is compact, powerful, relatively-inexpensive, and durable enough to be used daily.
Apart from the relatively short orientation for the passive display, I found it to be a very capable machine. In fact, compared to our reference Toshiba Tecra M7, which cost over $1,000 USD more than the tx1000 in a virtually similar configuration, the tx1000 more than held its own.
It is in this vein that we are awarding it the SmallBizVista.com Preferred award, and making it the recommended Tablet PC for all our customers.
In closing, I would like to thank HP, and AMD for the opportunity to I got to review this desirable unit. My only negative feeling about is the fact that the tx1000 has to go back. Sob, sob……
The full SmallBizVista.com tx1000 review is here.
*The Logikworx Standard Business Desktop 2007 consists of Microsoft Office 2007 Professional, Microsoft Office OneNote, Microsoft Windows Defender, Microsoft Windows Live OneCare, Microsoft Expression Web Designer, Paint.NET, Spybot Search & Destroy, v1.4, ahead Nero v7.8, Microsoft Tablet PC PowerToys, and InterVideo WinDVD v8.
The HP tx1000 is a Windows Vista-only system and is available with either the 32-bit or 64-bit versions of Windows Vista ONLY.
My installation of Windows XP was for demonstration purposes ONLY.
Windows XP is an unsupported configuration for the HP tx1000.
If you downgrade to Windows XP, you will do so at your own risk, and your system may either cease to function, or lose functionality.
Hewlett-Packard (HP) will NOT support you or your system in this configuration.
© 2007, John Obeto II for SmallBizVista.com®
Technorati tags: John Obeto, AbsoluteVista.com, SmallBizVista.com, Logikworx, The InterlocutorOne of the weekly business glossies is reporting that HP is supposedly bribing incentivizing retailers to drop store and aftermarket cartridges in favor of HP cartridges.
To the effect that Staples is dropping its store brand entirely?
IANAL, but this smells like unfair practice or injuring the competition to me.
If I were a buyer of inkjets, I would be on the phone to Bill Lerach of Lerach Coughlin Stoia Geller Rudman & Robbins LLP, so fast and looking to screw them back.
Isn't it enough that the stuff costs more than gold?
Coming right after the pretexting mess, do the holders of HP need this?
Mark, say it ain't so!
Leave well alone, and lower prices, that's how to compete!
© 2007, John Obeto II for SmallBizVista.com®